WASHINGTON — In the two years before the Sept. 11 attacks,
the North American Aerospace Defense Command conducted exercises simulating what
the White House says was unimaginable at the time: hijacked airliners used as
weapons to crash into targets and cause mass casualties.
One of the imagined targets was the World Trade Center. In
another exercise, jets performed a mock shoot down over the Atlantic Ocean of a
jet supposedly laden with chemical poisons headed toward a target in the United
States. In a third scenario, the target was the Pentagon — but that drill was
not run after Defense officials said it was unrealistic, NORAD and Defense
officials say.
NORAD, in a written statement, confirmed that such
hijacking exercises occurred. It said the scenarios outlined were regional
drills, not regularly scheduled continent-wide exercises.
"Numerous types of civilian and military aircraft were used
as mock hijacked aircraft," the statement said. "These exercises tested track
detection and identification; scramble and interception; hijack procedures;
internal and external agency coordination and operational security and
communications security procedures."
A White House spokesman said Sunday that the Bush
administration was not aware of the NORAD exercises. But the exercises using
real aircraft show that at least one part of the government thought the
possibility of such attacks, though unlikely, merited scrutiny.
On April 8, the commission investigating the Sept. 11
attacks heard testimony from national security adviser Condoleezza Rice that the
White House didn't anticipate hijacked planes being used as weapons.
On April 12, a watchdog group, the Project on Government
Oversight, released a copy of an e-mail written by a former NORAD official
referring to the proposed exercise targeting the Pentagon. The e-mail said the
simulation was not held because the Pentagon considered it "too unrealistic."
President Bush said at a news conference Tuesday, "Nobody
in our government, at least, and I don't think the prior government, could
envision flying airplanes into buildings on such a massive scale."
The exercises differed from the Sept. 11 attacks in one
important respect: The planes in the simulation were coming from a foreign
country.
Until Sept. 11, NORAD was expected to defend the United
States and Canada from aircraft based elsewhere. After the attacks, that
responsibility broadened to include flights that originated in the two
countries.
But there were exceptions in the early drills, including
one operation, planned in July 2001 and conducted later, that involved planes
from airports in Utah and Washington state that were "hijacked." Those planes
were escorted by U.S. and Canadian aircraft to airfields in British Columbia and
Alaska.
NORAD officials have acknowledged that "scriptwriters" for
the drills included the idea of hijacked aircraft being used as weapons.
"Threats of killing hostages or crashing were left to the
scriptwriters to invoke creativity and broaden the required response," Maj. Gen.
Craig McKinley, a NORAD official, told the 9/11 commission. No exercise matched
the specific events of Sept. 11, NORAD said.
"We have planned and executed numerous scenarios over the
years to include aircraft originating from foreign airports penetrating our
sovereign airspace," Gen. Ralph Eberhart, NORAD commander, told USA TODAY.
"Regrettably, the tragic events of 9/11 were never anticipated or
exercised."
NORAD, a U.S.-Canadian command, was created in 1958 to
guard against Soviet bombers.
Until Sept. 11, 2001, NORAD conducted four major exercises
a year. Most included a hijack scenario, but not all of those involved planes as
weapons. Since the attacks, NORAD has conducted more than 100 exercises, all
with mock hijackings.
NORAD fighters based in Florida have intercepted two
hijacked smaller aircraft since the Sept. 11 attacks. Both originated in Cuba
and were escorted to Key West in spring 2003, NORAD said.
(Source: USA Today - April 18/19, 2004)
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